MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
“It’s very possible that there has been some kind of leak at the No. 3 reactor,” Hidehiko Nishiyama, a spokesman at the Japan Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, said in Tokyo today. While radioactive water at the unit most likely escaped from the reactor core, it also could have originated from spent fuel pools stored atop the reactor, he said.
Comments
I read this earlier today. This is troubling and makes me wonder about the others as well. I have a suspicion that the people in charge were not entirely in reality about the situation at this nuclear plant.
by cmaukonen on Fri, 03/25/2011 - 11:00am
It's hard to know how straight the owner/operators of the utility, or the government have been, though it seems that they are perhaps forced into more honesty now. I don't know how much access the IAEA has, either. And I really didn't know the reactor ponds for the spent rods were on top of the reactors. 10,000 times the radioactive levels as the rest of the water sounds ominous.
Seriously, in the eventual clean-up phase, what do they do with all the contaminated material?
by we are stardust on Fri, 03/25/2011 - 11:10am
This is my main argument against nuclear power.
by cmaukonen on Fri, 03/25/2011 - 12:23pm
Reactor 3 has the dangerous MOX fuel in the reactor and the cooling ponds. MOX contains a grab bag of deadly plutonium isotopes, one of which, PL238, has a half life of over 14,000 years. Hopefully the plutonium is contained.
by NCD on Fri, 03/25/2011 - 11:20am
This says NPR reported its half-life as 24,000 years; good god all-friday; let's hope that's contained.
by we are stardust on Fri, 03/25/2011 - 11:34am